i,VAt S: I,A, i. l--0 , i -..4 l tp x. f . -= -,,,-.` ' , , -,10cAl" Is °o4'. Z *"*„..' ::. -741 - itt ar Zz; , ,,i-t7-•',,-; ~ I # tet *. ' - ;,-- - ~ NO VEMB ER 20,1868. •. . f ° , s , - _,,, . „...„„N0r...,.. , 2 '-:.,4 rt..".„son*DA"." At- . 4 4. i `,.PV.rl4f-,t;47sie.--- . A ' ''' '' s , ‘. a --.V6e wastiniteD ; ' ''t`f*,-:it';ii4 e.eadrZurlitottilolls Intl/Ho , , tb'fal ~ .t *0 5 1 ,,e," do the T , - gibed ..a. . atir......--..qa.,....“ Th. ~ ~,,,,,„,.. of ‘,4t.,:hunhi ' untli r-Wool.:L. ~., ' ',-. ' ..•".•-*E4IO ger. Dr. Tse Y'", ~, A '''' ''''„ 'tgairsion . „h7 a hatagtotitr. e , N' .4.44.-igObli*ge R.,. ' ', • = = :' ~ q4";ire- '4. J'-' rti'ha Netkii. ' `bot 18, , T X 4 21.1 . •c:--his ` : '' ' ' '. I . . '141,0, dated lii,Ureel 'sq. - - - allesintiAtiOr'6llaraeer ll ansilltorite,, -aruaalalstere *Lott itaWgu?t thf,r ,gattaitsg:. If tell p4reesentre of I,:li*li'%;*,_ ,O,..arolintgudiLltato that,,,,t'ind'ateAdininistrittion, - - ~, true. I.': Blus ter andlzay."--Ai5in,,,,9111011041 '4 , -Ay ttlill,ea: -411(14,'0r, le g al 00 ,: t ..me , g a l e : -1;!1.44 tit,- 1 ( 4 ) 14 - vs =on bY- ',. T'orayo l' s r. i 7.` m 4'61 teat ; lr eo e, , u it Illibtleler;t7be'odnzeo!"%Ett, ~,. Mel t as °W et tutu e m i g ran t' * n..erimil i;r men A do. '-- eolltiomr n.tlawlese slid fbal atilto:ome ~. . ...f the n 5„..,.. 4 ''' ‘ 2.21 4.4. .2 1.. .01, ;one r e, ' oDuc o ' 0161 laa900"" Tiiidlas4elit'..7,epted -",-;:-. °4. = ' ..aoldagfol Ira ° lb blobile.'.. to the ' 011attOkt"13)'"" t theeell"t" ntii'i pal*. ,Ittitoetba - atialdsr + ,fore that the 0 over, hone obi" to V," trust> ;gber° 'i t in th e ' I°Etr" "' esel, 00,11 R ii°l`"lreat " it'fidi .°t• if%telebg° v"t artnibusger 14 °Y "; hat a Ailinlit:4o,oo its , g i l , 0 Clarion) ear a over kAa60.,1 ,eddiod. mi s s ,ilss PP iiirtioanePaase ~ t act TIM•P. , "a atistreoulr 4 - anua ft y t. -- -' 1 01 01 / 6 L" 'itityy elk 'a eddenela of , X a .,% 17 Wu kthif a I ° its oottrses the r in 1 , 0 „,„ ~,Z7,11;-,'Tt,tvaokt., :it s effects ex ' setd a d ive or th e '" ' it m° {4 Y l w"9 "letttiOnOas eon" . t i, a 1 ) . , 03-6m* la that gb° it 361," wei swept t h eWl es 'lla '" 11 g i -4711° Pleaa use en Pronlir ," r!"'Prille erlotlen'`eVeij ll° el to • the four ulna, "Llairai4 0 soittore`i ifi piece. , l u to r e l at e, Mr. i ta k e ° a/ ale far tore diairerr ig oa h aut ef his and' irha' s le if and watt °flier T 0,,, `severely yblocdr bli- lailed pd- °ay"- araon then Pisces + 'fam il y, wore -,- t fourteen Pers'a' f moodY ` del °'- o the son•itt'law ° a w °°° xt jaoicson, 'gr. Mood,' was , hut Otek-',,f' ,„„„alairtiored.r -, church and a , escaped entire ly " uninjured. I„,,E,,tiocpes , new. ;;utetottlf lila 318117 i -elibig'deetroYed I '' boo, uaLahert-.;.-.,The__rro loge. tAirdor In uu of heerY gr"' m os s of yes / tr O m it, ^ gork.„BtleniV sk °Noise the new I The lir. ',' Tat of thetidestV r f th e new i tag 140 c •' • The , zo°- a - two the fqairehfltt„thipti 014%1, f a g in about (Stilt! a i.;..' "e s al in B,l,o,tkauellee ;town the walls, ' tlisiu -an -' i, carrying to a heOP of `0:01°"3` lbht umihe °mar° uponstructure_ e an old tens ' alier°d°‘6l6g f the ruins•full bre aking t hr ou gh ruins. V e rt 7 ; t .tifthstreet> of t h e build - . .13 tale hil 7 ' RUM° oo In „fleet on nutmeg la a dem e Armstrong, 71 r the roof en • -IA Mrs. AEZI when a p See 0 Tbo o_etmPs el da ughters , sore Ellt with twojd h 1 eau her , inflicting ; ,h their'; .., fled . came violently uFewly eseaVel,wi m t ' trait ,CtaaPle' ' The 111,F °`U a l t. f the4TwPwa- stat ion-. 14nlibini P°llemen e an - , t 4 th 4 she lk:`,i'li - ' the - in3lrfett.: , woman ;A m . '-T- 'mblia-,119.F.1fFP 1 , oi =trans' '' Douro, t o be going,,w° n 'the house next - ' .Piwar° ~, of Ail fell M e crashing in t h e , thee- por,t.on,_ sehittrareutt fd di:another the arlenalt ''' a - oorm the etotrwa V' anne person. A! t f)-breakeng for tunately in i orla g d ' , dished, in dame" hat as oomPletelY' e h undre d . del ' ' 'bible In'the rear w va lued at, two htth In ._ ' die bOraat to th e hOzer o = whfenit ,„,od. The damage _ .1.... bun eall' " e l K" ; fa, estimated at, -abau` thr ee great ti v enth t etree , The haialuent tjeriMaao the Nene 'diva dollen' rinuideid, peva= "11,vtl'reebouding was'. Talui. disaster : l'vsrthis 3"rulug. ' a s fora long time, - 1 if th,e, hi April lists 142(11! , puning. Th° 'commenced 'of `oontentlony and __-=a by, this linea l' su bject apparently opened ..'lu4 field ", t Thankagivog geoted 'Tau- two follo wing stitle' the 25th , the twentY,-nartdey flea .i tea .tt hog for • - , - ai a hfaesaohnao ' has b°°,. a aPaPien„ New ll'aaYe Lr North• Care instant • Maine , Delftware, Mary la nd; Flo rida;Alab ama, emcectton } rgla, liana, - Sou th Care i l n 24 Cilau Tennessee, Ind ;Ida, ikin Kentoohy* minnesota > ' fetedarlVPl' Oh io, Witoeind°, 'Uwe' i ing in ,; t. miehlgen, Thabliag e thine-. . ~,cnahlugton. December. 2, two httesOnlii °IV v e ' 0; Thursday, ton .Iditoit Ve*nnena cueertUderday. Tba Stel anted ere weeks flaal 7 ! L ae not been aPP _ rni lug day Arkansas, Pailf° 1 1 ThatikogiV duo, ToZael Watehfieton Virginia, Ifni% mend, says the to Of tie ' We` hea. .- ru mored, that the Store rw in the f last evening, ofengineers, not - ' West"' ° ' iodise aboard n bid s for Irte, I ' ll . l BP" examine and report a . then,of.nor MIT oefeieef iorttee/ino, fo r the ele° V The hid e are noliettn°4gtha pboa r detphis 304 A b oar d or ' ,Inlidliikeat al Li p to the 26th ins tant.lo 0 annoatuo ' ic b e e'ree n i n e eent met &short time °:°eino on ,a re- ES naval i t 38 eeghtells )30 railed ', ' lib ','.4 "'° ' 7 , ,i' t , . brokers port., of• mou.otraatExolt tgaeiloftron ' A ~itunhaetimtar a t by a batch et .1,7 The - fraud VP' have hoon..y/U Bank" o f , Ailltria *:, -a „eat ' g goal , i ahe uotge,lfer 4 • the st. A btiksome ° t -+ - tan, rt awir°, . , n o t 410000 0 r e '' li 'A Hong" id ea of l i:ta bu-f or rede m ption . sz i a tad ett an , emi a Germ an ,,- jh their o r° L s mot at the beingll!T 11,,,Alary al lPerf , fiZanuunitlee At 6_o°l in-Toronto, tsY , ih o l alo Lora Gary /cmin' ' Llthe ' Dist S a turd e V, a 8 e ve nin g ;, litPatlilt that piase, „ already annou nc e d; ~on 4, of, bit bell°. ominmottotbi • "repeated... ah, Air' tbscall , el' •-,a oasis:anal via tient ' I - North Amp'"? , '' ""e;'Pas gh4 i gfonotain ship ; canal, wafer, .c a } heffalt e BM 3' , the fie_a°4o Columb i a river. fa : ,,f ;the aged and Prese,r r.nd of yrOildances ...60, died " brr . Towns. ,2 t ~ a id el the,illiwar .'"' o_o, ~ ' f crept. 10 ° ,08 ° ' a a deipe,giTo... a , Atthez 6 - - ea et bi t e realm° 'll toyer the hal". YOl7 audda y fe saYt that whatever t),,hio eon's It la 101°° m ush,e olfaction of tli a 'Toe: mate eaera 0 1 °1 9 7 kiate2Md his ma igsg, the dad and alirg a" didg =hue - °' ato ger the Brea United Etta a "ato and f - as ‘if eh° 9 2y4 190 la ePrie -total ul" Inoldsling Si ',- arlad Amollet s2B2>aitisP' rts for rheaabe 1,512 832,14 f was btillinif, The ea7)2l, -of yltkoil i ' - ~°nl; t lls ., ~.,d bullion. -= of W ar is Tepidly gee.' -~ a l i t. tv o Secretary ha was at- We earn 1 ' the MOMS with w hichle now able te riegiaarlai f t °/11 . ..3 aid ' that he laiked p fa r' 111 4 °1 a' .. a oar Burn' +elegy.' Ford, w ho mard-e- Officer to be williem a' •, yesterday gen 6 , 1714cl:1.81i' ihtlnteciLtyl-tip paned' a_rrtairieto aaatphEferosteuta - The 'hiale.o,e gave kat strews bY, a , Zeit nighe' ""+ '' . oftbo edgors'e_f Militia. bowl] gsql on' ;,' mar tuddenlY Sohn;ila. Tnraraw R4istert di°, rs". the Mehol'fisea:l4-thet city '?'_ ' - held at Bran en 1481.4".. Y---eageiof fireelte°,lB 1,1{41=00;1° kliA Seri. ni gogne on Tellt....4_ar mottaret te ll ir q sg P i a t i nr t :he abdurotalopaatorausthsoilties ci had *v t.t. 'MIA bY th e *Catholic, a Jerr - e attse ' hla nurse; trh? reA Ca r i e s of reg°. 108131' k t° f frith holy water. :; o f Mb net 'd'ill 'sprinkled II W° ` complaining tad Biel. to futtOMl ito" ea " - d t a tie tint a t Boatto _ 2 ....af' r the Pzell en 3, Ministers ' "11""*"...13„„,t- dame, thtsugh t-e tatiVel of other atie_bilui7 anion With the. reVreaeu g ot , of Edgar to urine-a that court, `the restora tion ered in, they ‘li4wer. his parents, to be ed. theproper; t the 01 : 1 : *AY .theiaka for_the Attar° afhaea persuasions ''dllarlf""n-e ihnaiVtlariceorrealtilludiranOn°tfhOePairetreofmnierT4anints: theii tbl 9 ,1 1 . ° l or at least t° g ru r t,volthor nurses, or oth e r s , .• •Ild an d dno4 cl • e tin beptitrin illY- a "min tomioniudy. -,it Riananta.eftell civilly or t t ai , oil the Tenth a n d hay, amount - The re" li p all4i, on Tiumkeffl ~_w ord and WI/eager o n the seine dal* ifir:utel 8,000 te l e d to 4600, g„,,epany carried with` the omnibus %%lid Are" "mu difilatlitles wedoseday v,ooo,PleeeaTing been settled un , P ro P i l et t ru It ' , , ,-,- ( ‘‘. . got, jambs rats afternoon.:f‘e, sire C om P 4l +l le contemplated Th°'nlllsT w ig' start on , th e hie , M ara a ' ad Boston tad visit to New 3x4o,sejsold . piitiOti,tif T:,E, - ....P4orsipt aid Trrethiri brlnyltig out a ifoadiliOCEdlttoriof,D,4l4iii,* th'e'ityw thit , =ro beautiful" ,0,t1nn' , 44 . the; -.WirerlY Newel e; ont.i eistie,d'last yi by !Bailor Pleldri , ,fif 'pot ton,= - onolr itoryy tri,U.ltioltutiar, With liMirietti, tlfnlly novels, bin ! : isi, , poyititinisistlyllsTei:t6iissta ! i:remetrmattor as, any one Of the .Wavorly Nevelt. ' The new pOisTat* bY:,Petersini,; will be a 'tau simile, *en; to: the;erpjg*y . iiiis, of the new tot .uff under his own with ihoineeption Of being ono-thlrd cheaper , . be - sold - for a dollar, while In ndon the prise hira dollaiiand-half,- , We hive ' ''seinAha - ,poitirdt, ef' Dlohnis; after ttphotagrayh 4711ifiViig,'ictAqii,, , :wiitai,'Fitis*n,`11:se had I .4 oii6ite4 40;16 :invir''oithin; end can eey, from pen99athnoyrjediel hifttiliAellioillhendse of • • -tbe:tteatitithor yet pnblithed;;f=li Messrs . Peter-. Won will l fieVi qtr, 4ptirate'fiplifiesiOns 'of ihfir fine' - . ol itailie,:io l l*nj*.b:o l lOvteintY; • _ ,‘, ,41tedia!i gp!lik.• the Mad iel7 86'411645t,;.Aa.*"1/8, 41tiiwippi esatrieht Nuo au IleoP • I/ 6 '12441We the test , at of the gest. , 1 '. ) ...h:,., , ' iirs at lineliel;Tund Hell, We - -; ';k.;710)3,1014.1419*: °O, --,7 'bi o h alt . 06' great singers .- 1 ' 14: perform i ° ° f ? ;z! 1 4r iti l ' l " ll ta 'alr e t tte i- l id i r i 'y t a i , t o t as to: 0 1 : 4 1 1 c hi n str o g e l 1 5, 6 8 1: 1 , ' .',-;:• '; f 4 -?iielttitslittietl(ollT3l.- -msii,i's dfAtlthhtet; - ;•• . :'-l';ir tO r t- - . airll/,' - 13 -0 4 . d1°11 ,, i ' i B er m i n a I Labe -. 044**11 *O rArar. (4 '1)1 ;sleeted; Ind ' ' • - - it.'o 101,ialiattoiji • hind/bit? Y.., with J---'thr° -,,,Tij,rebeigtiiittit thigibiti for 3 44 911 .• h 1 .- --: '••-:,;-'%,..41,i-nit,/,ifife,Wgialgrteiettei,IireitidirStrtIOM ,'''''', c. ' 2 ..':.:'&=--"11e!1° - thlttle"iiii )orreilifitet price of One ,t,t5..;1,4.4 `4:* , 11, pet :the ill' 4,,,- :lt seeteg 03 ? 6 , , ,,',,,,,-,,,dimgyeitim.,l6-4, 11.:.,,,,,t 7. 1 i.,..,. ,7 - --t. v , . 7 " ,,- ; ,-;,'', eas'A,-'''': ii:,x,i'ettikiniiiktilatii: liptfigi-0,41,z-,.', 'f..- - ~ ,v i - 1 1 - ,-, r. ,. ..rf / ~f- ' .,,',, , v• ," ', ' ,"1 w:.,,,pztsljl.4MT3s4klit: r;Jai4.l,lloo4l44:°ne = _ftelognlnettooliiiii,3,,„itig:ealta,4o--„lii!spo 1 ->14,,zii,,,,:-,.....,4:44,v4,-,.,,,,,. ~e iiiiii4l47okiimitiopuigek*.f wit kol:4:_r_4,o ..: „olfirm-IRL vr4,,,,1ia-iiiiiisolioeliplatikotr, efl. ,ctx xf , Atm , g-- 7, irwiticitie tisk 04# 44i,piArsimitig ~ , ,...,?, i 1.,..t, 1 V, ~! .- r 4 ,. , -4 7,- 4 -1,14,-,eciii tVltiiilikla 0, wter ,- ‘ 1 090,A9, `7 4 ; ',144 i,igiitoiiii.a.' ii ,- , , • . tt: , -- r,, 3444 - - iiiyatioweiredidati !,toik, e f '2Virl.Tl,"Y "*- s.' .0 l a ' 'ics4".l4filil aelegaill°4l6l4o°ro4 - . : c e,4 4 0,, Zkft., L;toislll` af074%.,,,4 ~:.,2' 6fith.iir'iti',' A. 4 • '-:ifff.vw.4fift****#.o ?°:44 1 1 1 r - - - ,k ,B—,Fit..-.0 ,k 44401010 .i*sivegott_. ;In 'V Petuasylvl4 to e outhr-Samos , The DeMocratioqiiitief sakNerth has pat itself inpositteAte feast for .the adfast 'Mont,' of differineentMtifrthh:sSeeth4 Its. claims, it sees , They the amply - warranted by the history of the past, and its pledges are as well endorsed for the Nur°. Cidinanee of 1787 was passed by tile t0i216401, fold Confederacy, the alave,States;tui , they stooCtlom, had, in„ the,, lionse,of Representatives a , majority of the tasjdrity of the tnensberef-That Ci,rdinausceprohibited slavery: ,tifiPtoyth#eit4t.4.lj,biritO4l,l 100, when, ,elavery Was ,lirellitilteiTtUalt this 'territory of the Union ping norti(of iiii,deg,'B6,Mitt.' of north 'lati tude,ttio'iree' Stateubad -a , majority, in the Ifoinie,2of,'Representatives in. Congress of 24 dotes; or;'oife=tenth of Oki whole number. • Ifi 1864; when - Abat ConipiOndee:•was• repealed, - the free Status had a majority 'of 64 votes, or ;nesylif'On.e=fiftlict them . bile number -or idly fourteen and a 'half to nine. The next census Fill:greatly :11:orona.) this disparity of kepieeentatlyehroe . ln the " respective sections th a •nation: It will be nearly as two to one,. preponderance of the free States in the:fiesiatck will, by that time, become fixed and unalterable for the time te come. • How, then,;standisitheciai, in the , past and in the tatitre, hetieerithose opposing interests? ;,When the'Sonth itself, without' eserve, as sented te,the',Ordinance of .1787, the act Ws' One'of;contrie,t and agreement, covering the atibject-nietter , y tairly„ rally;' and equitably. :Neither of the Parties hie wined to impair or impeach the , compact. Ohi?, Indiana, 411, - iohigan ;, Wieconsid ,:; and lota, also, ae.part of the Territory of ,Wisdonsin, theugh lyinglieyond thellisatesippi river, have come l i latejhe, - ,lJninti:tinder „the,' restriction. 'All tese States, emoted, within the, territory ceded by Virginia, Cr./required as appendages .51(..,the,'Orighial, neaten, stand now in the Confederacy upon the basis of. the agreement of "1787. ,But this' *as not an act of Fe deral ,'intlioritY, Carried ,by force of rep resentathre t • numbers.: .'. It rests moral uPort the agree- Merit of the , seferal parties interested -in it. It had the . rightful; force of a bargain aS to the" territory .withie the scope of its" in , _ tended- oPeration..,But it had, also, the effect • Of- relating' an' expactation that the spirit and Pedief:of thieerrangeinerit was the intention of the,contriteting partici' , in ail like cases that inightlhareafter arise But this eippetation, 0,8400,34 its by.a, geographical line long be fore line was drawn ; for- Millais ,slPpf and 'Alabama; "framed out of the territory ceded by,:fleorgiannd South Carolina, were admittedna Slave:States in the years 1817 and '1819; and ,Rentneki., and Tennessee, tinder the, same -• conditions, as- early as - 1792 and -t 1798; - while *: 'the Men of 1787,:, Were; Shill; present ,and acting in the .Matter,o2aia,s,;, 'honing 'their own construe: tion - -•_of the,and of the reetrictiye'ordinine, 'With the like tacit re- Ihrence qto a still undrawn geographical line IMulaiane came in in the year 1812. Neier theleils the restriction of-the Ordinaneo was drawn into a precedent,' and became an"im plied ornonatntctive clains;When in 1820 Mis eonri,, lying in the same latitude with the orl ' ginal territory which - bad been dedicated to, 'free' lahrz, came to seek admission with ale- -gory. in. her:Constitution. • Then arose the question as to the claims of the respective 'interestein'the new acquisition of ;territory _Made py pnrchaie from France in 1808. The agreement of 17872- did not eoier er contem plate this new It raised no pledge or 'promise respecting - it,-and it could not fairly - be construed Into surrender of the Bettie =ant to the:Federal authority. Neither bed -the Constitution - of , the The expressly; pro bided for th e case. The South bad never as sented to" the:doctrine that the power of Con gress, under the Constitution, Le to dispose of, 'and, : mike.' all „needful,rules and regulations respecting; the territory or other property be longing to the United Statei," extended to the' ,domestic • inatitutiens of the Territories ; but ,Iters,c the.;.seittlement -,of the, question' then.at issue, the surrendered the point . 17ortli -; yielding to _Tier - - the admission-of Alissouri. -"But that surrender :iii4c, , , - ,rocimprp,ipisp, and in 1854-the 'Damn.' Crate -.Party. of _the. North released-her from the agreement by a legithriato exercise of the PoureKwhlch it; held, in !the Federal Crevern .:*illany one say that It was nortivii p#e!ot-kilie,Congrpqiyof,lBB4 'make, or runnel's; tirkY.,eentrait which ,fell within the Sphere of its Constitutional power? "If it found ',stitilelent.reationitillre;princiPles and. Policy pfthetontedericy'foilloing so, it was, uat as right =in Watt any honesfman is in re"- Schiding..anY . Contract whieh,'_fer , any good ";reation r itie unwise orinexpedient to enforce. .Ityrais done bravely and 'boldly, running all if:aka:and takingall consequences. The quei titin,Win ;generonaly and justly taken off the ground of centred, and pit upon that Of right Bud equity, as well as ofDemocratic principle and the inherent necessity, of the thing. -*ay-we not turn now to the slave States and , 11, a9,e, have reierscd the precedent which was foii".liaif• a _century arrayed agairistyou ; we have released you from a - concession Whose 'disadvantages you had a right to complain 'of, and: we 'had'ao,right to insist upon; you are remitted" , trlite' original ground of the Con= fiderev "; 'Yen , stand now exactly where You :wouldntand if ; the questionwere a new one; 'we baSe restored your equality of rights; we have established the rule .of natural 'justice ; and we have given free playto the natural law :of theinbject; and all this in your behalf, and it:nur, own cost. Tending this_ long struggle; our men have been siorldeed, Ont.' party has been broken, and from the position of a commanding majority we, are reduced 'to the • ,cendition' 'of holding only the babofee of, power between you and yonr,enemies,-who hive: grown to a force of twenty Senators' and ' a hundred Representa tivesin•Congines. - -Shall not these things be considered? Have yeti nOt,sufficient proof ,of our past • fidelity to the law .Of fair play and equal rights ' for all the' Stites? you pot, sufficient mu; ranee . that to ‘.the future, . however much keit:: may be relatively weakened in- the Uplon;'We_Wilr see justice administered to .You Twicis you have been caught in a false .poeitiont. ••Youriiisaouri cOmpromiso was blunder—we relernied 'yen. • yourLeconapton policy was a worse one—with the faithfulness ,of tt'frlead we havi3,realated yon successfully; '4..ircater serviceiltan ,the ,first : That wee only the reparation of a less--phis was the pievention,of a wrong. • 'Aron love the Union—(nark l we now ad dress-only the friends of the Union)—do you riot? You'can•live in it, ' ion you not? The !owlet an equal numerical force has -no alarm lot, if the, majority - will be governed by jus tice an/equity, This majOrity and this justice your-can seinire in the Union-for all time to coin°, ifyort will but recognise your friends, and give no jtiat adVantagee to your enemies. You can be no 'safer-out of.the-Union agurnat us, . Annie if with Us. Meet us, then, In the spirit of union andharmony' and we will bold you in the fraternal embrace of reciprocal rights, equal honor, and mutual interest.' our trims with you are that we will defend, you from invasion of everyform, oppression_in every degree, injury and insult of eveiryitind; and yon 'shall refrain from all forms of hostility to the _rights and interests which, wo are bound to maintain and defend.' The interests of Your kind Of labor is the 'objeclof your solicitude and the sub feet Of ,YOUrieeleueY• have a differentkind :Of : productive indnetry, which we must not, and weuldnet,',4bontion for the 'sake of peace with you, and the, werldininlns to back you. Our Inatituttens are as'close to our hearts; and as :necessary to. one being and well-being, as ,Timre , ,are you., 'We - do not say to you, then 2 not at the ' , peril of our resist ' Once ". say,, a itearict theni.'? lintitiesides this,' we ask you to consider them; forilt is neither 'a favor nor a concession that we ask ;What we demand is your lscessityirmiinterest, as numb as our own. IT.WO 'POW ethinWiii; we Weald break the ;bend thatunites We wfinid not be bound telitifstent of ruin for all the recollections of the :AT =the joie' , h onors arid7glortes - , of tho ,tfolon,, and - the grandeur . that - . • rest upon it, ,4o io:norn:4llan4pnld • gni your delves under similar circtimstances. , We have 10 - provilao 'fgr in tiie.pr`eaent and - inunp.diate,'lnturn, winine in. 'On'itfies` arecas tea the - wants of the liigiteett'vilifzetiOn"dainand? They ifengri. ,cultural, manufacturing, and commercial; and VOA:them depend cur ulotal i polOical ) and econorniewell-beleg.' 'We Some to you in the .spilt, of fraternity and ailr;te9isve these to lerate, geriatonfly considered justly ;treated. We claim your assistance for their :prifteotion .on the ground, 'of, star rights and your duty; and .the equal interest of both. It is your interest to accord us Federal pro tection for our labor against the overwhelm ingpower of the greater and cheaper capital, and the - cheaper - wages of Europe, by raising the revenues of the GOvernment from foreign imports. , Your fathers thought so 'when they united with' Pennsylvania end the Middle States againit New, England, rattle close of the last war with, Great 'Britain, in providing for the debt and the current expenditere'of the na tion by imposts upon' foreign importations. New'Engiand, then governed by the interests of foreigli commerce, resisted, but your Can nevi and Onre overbore them, and New Eng land and the Itorth turned themselves to the industrial arts, and rolled-upon your implied pledge for their protection. .The North, which, - Dien since that time, has consumed twice as much: of the imports as the South has done; took the' double share of the national hardens ,upon its bank, and bore us gallantly through the struggle,,content to pay the cost for the benefit of the defence which the policy afforded them. The political independence of tho Union Was achieved by - the joint labor and sacrifice of 'all the colonies. Our industrial independ ence of Europe remained to be achieved; and to that the hardy sobs of toil devoted them selves with.a zeal. and ability that asked . only au even Chance . tO insure success. The Infant indurtries of a - nation may justly look to it for a fostering care, for their maturity will richly repay the-protection. A condition of .things has returned upon us now, precisely similar to that which put your leaders into the front of the partisans of protection,in 1816. We are again in debt, and our annual eipenditiare' is sure, for long years to come, to transcend all other supplies than those which an adequate tariff can afford. A hundred millionsper annum must be proms .vided: Import duties are the only resource of any promise. Let us have them with a due discrimination in favor of the branches of pro ,duction that are suffering now by an over whelming competition. Give to our manu factures the impulse which shall set free the gold and restore the credit of our people, now alike useless in the insecurity that threatens their employment, and by our increased con sumption and added emigration we will give the agricultural interest a larger market and better, prices than all foreign demand offers to them. Oompelled to buy foreign fabrics with our gold, we are quickly made unable to purchase, and the national revenues and your exchanges run down together. Yon have no interest in our disasters; you have the highest in our prosperity. : Bat we find we are entering upon a discus sion which must be put into better array than the purpose of this article permits. ' Let it be understood, therefore, for to-day, that we are only stating our case ; wo will take the earliest Opportunity for displaying, ft. Returning to the point we intended to make, we have to say that the Democratic party of the North is struck powerless for all Federal functions, and rendered incapable of supporting the South in its jest demands, if we are notsupported by"it in the policy of. fosterinithe industry of our. people.. • Other' ongagetnents,compel us to postpone the statement of our views of the tariff policy required by the country and,tho treasury, for, perhaps, a week;-and we ask our readers to wait for its presentment, for we very much 'doubt the likelihood of their anticipating either its form or its details. In the meantime, and in advance of our own views, we spread before our readers the Ma tured' opinions, clearly and emphatically ex pressed, on the side wo espouse, of one more likely to bellatened to by the South, especially in this Juncture. We mean TAugs BUOTIANAN t President of the United States. He speaks for hlinself and for the country on the first page of Tux Pam. - /14paptal trom Washington in Reference .to the News from Merlon. (Bpeol,al correspondence or The Press.] WeenviaroN, Nov. 19, 1858 It is not true, as- stated- in the interest of the ao-oallod Constitutional party; that " Zuloaga de sires to retire from the Presidency of Moxioo:" lie is at hand and will continuo President for the pacification of the country. The statement that " Guadalajara was 're-taken by the party ad verse i tc;' the .Government" le old news, and unimportant.. Before this, that oity is again in full poseerelottof the Government. The gallant defeat of Vidnurri, by filliamon, released a large tome from duty at the capital; the hopes of the diaorganl aation ":Icaidere are thereby frustrated, and the Government of 2U:cage. Is, and will remain, of ne cessity, as well as on the score of prudence, ae ceptable; to' the 'nation.' Thei proclamation of Juarez, styinchimself President, le amusing. 31e himself invited the Spanish fleet to approach Mexico by his own'emissary Wargo, impudently, in the name of Juarez, presenting an insult to the Spanish nation, in the shape of a threat of hostili ties by him (Juarez) if any Battlement of the dif- ficulties between Spain and Mextoo was made by the envoy of Mexico at the Court of Mad rid, appointed to that distinguished mission by the national administration of President Zuloaga. The rsyanishiliet can be at Vera Crux only to avenge the cutout of Tuareg and Lafarge, and to protect the interests of Spanish. subjects rest dentin Neale°. Any war demonstration ofSpain, feared by Juarez, will not be an 'unfriendly one to the Mexican people. Native brigand chiefs have merelye possession of the Gulf seaports of Mexioo. It is proper, for the benefit of commerce and nations, that the present fratrioidal war in Ideate° should be put attend to. Spatula in the right That Power will beneficently surrender Vera Ores, Tampico, and other seaboard cities into the rightful Custody of the constituted authorities of the nation authorities acknowledged by the foreign Powers. As the natural defender of the true In terests of the Mexican people, any demonstration made by'ller gallant forces to sustain Justice and right, Will be m'ade In behalf of her own children, and for the reinstitution of peace, where there now reign only discord and despair. Mexico is again herself so soon as the true interests of order, of commerce, and of freedom are reestablished at Vera Oros, Matamoros, Tampico, Tobasoo, and Tuxpan. Juarez must retire' from the country. Ile alone is the enemy of the people and nation ality. Mexico must be herself. S. PNILADIELPSITA GRAYS' COMPLIIINNTART BAN lINVer.—A number of citizens, desiring to testify to the Philadelphia. Grays" their appreciation of their past services, and their admiration of the soldiery bearing of the company, propose to give them a banquet on the 000asion of their taking posSession of the new armory fitted up for them, on Monday; the 29th inst. Any friends of the company who wishlo partiolpatomay have an op portunity by milling upon 3. D. Brown at the Ar mule Betel EXTRA LARGO BALE ON TNEEDAY NRXT.—ITTO. deTinablo ground-rents, stooks, real estate, &a.— altogether thirtq•nino properties, and some of them very valuable, by order of executors, trus tees, and others. See Thomas & Sons' pamphlet eatalogue, lamed today, end advertisements un der auction hoed. Tun einem—This establishment under Mr. .Lout's system of management is drawing excel lently well It seems to be the general opinion that the efforts of Dr. Thayer, as jester and conversationalist; form one of the most unique entertolnments ever offered to the publio, rir Mr. J. E. Gomm, Seventh and Chestnut streets, has a large and elegant stook of the cele brated. Raven, Bacon & Co., Minna & Clark, and other Planoe—Just the thing for 0111118T1U8 PRE SENTS. Latvia Or Hon: T. L. ILturtiti. , ,-A Spring field (111.) correspondent of the Tunes gives the following gloomy account of this gentleman's health. The letter is dated November 12: " I have jest returned from the bedside of the Hon. T. L. Barrie ; probably the neat letter you receive must announce his death. You remember that during the last session of content be was scarcely able to perform the duties of his position on account of ill-health. Ile returned home and 'partially re covered, but was again prostrated by the maiden. tel use of a poisonous 4irug. Apparently be re covered' from that alto, but previous to the late election his health again failed, and-he wee unable to take , any active part in the canvass, beyond writing a letter to the friends who had again put him in n omination , Ile insisted on being carried to the 'pelts to vote, - but has not since that day bean able to leave hished. It is almost impossible that ho should ever leave it." CONVIOTION 0.1/ Rzir, DANIEL Dcrimr.— The trial of Rot , . Daniel Downey, a Catholic, priest, on a charge of the murder of a man named Kelley, by shooting him with a pistol, at Staunton, Va,, resulted, on Monday lest, in the Jury finding him guilty of murder in the seeond degree. The term of imprisontnent in:the pent. twittery was fixed at eight years, , - . Tun AMOUNT of specie now in the banks of, Boston . ia - very large, reaching $0,487,000., The Atlas Bank has given notice that it intends to apply to the Legislature ca p ital next session for penztlettott to !promo it s 0500,000. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1858. BY.II77IMIGHT • Letieiti4lFl4 6 Occasioptd.tP oorrenponquit4 - 04iie . g.t,eirs4 ' . ' There is another vaciaucy in' the daintier-ear by the deatliof - thenonsul at Macsoi-Ohina. - This,' to be sure, is not a profitable appointment, and would, to the person commissioned, be much as the gift of an elephant to the Buglishman from his, friend in ,Bluee,the establishment f.f i the English eettlement•to the north of Bang Kong' Macao has gone rapidly-into decadence. It is now. only the ghost of the , splendid emporium, that it was during the first;days of our Government. 'the dames, therefore, are ten to'one 'that, with the new law, whieh'allowe Salaries only from the cora meneement of carrion and no outfit or Infit, 'the apulicants for the consulate at Malmo will be few. Bat who can, tell? „ , • g. I see that it was telegraphed from here by the agent of the Assoolated pross that the petitioners in the oases, of the Goorgiana and the , Lieste Thompson bad been anticipated by the Adminis tration. This whole thing is a clear specimen of the How-not-to-Do-R systeta so graphically set forth by Dlokene. The •olaimants against Peru for, justice , and reparation for the outrages perpetrated upon our commerce in these Instances, have clamored for years, and they will clamor for years yet to come. Bow sad a thing it Is that the appeal, I am an American °Risen, does not seam the speedy pro; tection and vengeance that in olden days did that appeal lam a Roman ()Risen J. The meanest States can kink and cuff us with impunity. Whero is the power, or rather weakness, of Central and South America, that has not thrown at us, whoa welter° asked for indemnity for the ,robbery and the slaughter of our °Bisons, the famons Entities , bookerian insultof the thunib to tIM nose and the four fingers wiiggling around it? Isti't it a Shaine that it is so?—for who will believe that Wo are yet the dead lion of the fable? I ‘ hope'red.tapeism Is not to be our bane, as it is that of Greet Briteda, A There is great trouble about the New York 'col lector. If you will refer to tho,flaion of a few days ago you will see a short paragraph, in which • it is insinuated that Parker wall sacrificed by cer tain parties who were anions to defeat certain memberd of Congress. The allusion is here Id the war made by Wood and Walbridge upon thollon. Daniel R.' Sickles. Sickles stands high with tbeAd ministration hero. Be is bold, brilliantand plaoky, and has been of more service to them than they are themselves willing to admit. &hell has been his bitter enemy, and Is after him even now. Sickles, and his friends demand (heti - 30411 shall be removed, and charge that he was against him, Mottles, at the late eleotiod, of whiCh I pia some there can be no doubt. It will be, piesentiy a question whether the Administration can do without Sickles or without. Schell. - - Avery singular article appears in the Richmond Enquirer of the 17th, which looks like an attaek on the Charleston Convention, and charging, with some truth, that Congressional, caucuses, regular or irregular, make the nominations, not only of our President, but seleot Senators and Representa tives, ignoring the - people, and destroying the. whole idea of a representative principle in Parties. The article in question presents Governor Wise,'as the Ithero.orater," for the Pleeidenop, and is couched in 'terms of peculiar emphasis. It will attract attention. The Paraguay expedition, that wall projected with as mush bravado and flourish of trumpets km the Spanish, armada, bids fair, from all accounts, to meet with a like disastrous fate. That we aro right in the animus of the expedition is certain, bat we ought to take oaro that the objeot we aim at should be acoomplithod—that the means should be the list and beet-managed. The eogiolobs Louts Napoleon said very truly that a groat 7311, Lion ought to be silent, or never to speak Itt,valn: Just think, ye gods and little fishes of Raritan Canal propellers going to the musts of South Amelia& ! Why, they would not live beyond Sight,' of our own shores. Then, the expedition Is !cavity In dotaobments, as the army loft for Utah, and may be out off in detail. 1 • But Lopes is determined on fight. Ile will not call us the " United States of Amorios," but in silts on the cognomen of the United States 'of North America. And England, too, may squirm, but the dictator continue to wear his tin-, story hat with its "ribbons and its flaunting, " But oar expedition oannot get up the river, end they will have to shoot at the tops of mountains from a long distanee, viewing the forts of Para guay through glasses of double Intensity. There is no hope of Clambering suooessfully up the steep acelivitios with the present force, and no surreund leg State, all being manta', will permit our troop, to maroh through their limits to get ai Toss. So, foreooth,, It seems the eipedition Must ,r °turn And leave Lopes to his common:dal monopolies. It fcir eibly reminds one of the chivalrous French Ktrig, who marched his ten thousand men up the hilc, and then, with a discretion that: history parties. larly preseeves,.mareled than down again".,„l Ocuastoast.- CENIIIIAL rimprzwitisam,: 00IIERNOII DANK/1.7 I/OD DEST-71,1HW CANADIAN COMAOII—.GRUEL 'VOA! UPON TNS P 0011: REAVT LIAEL BU/TA ON CONAD• OOREOII.-.WINTEMIALTIIR'S VICTIMS. OP EISWIRIE AND ANN IaYDN OP HONOR-ALLIGATOR BEANO)" AGAIN TURNS UP-THAFISSOIVING FESTIVITIES: RUSE TO THE THEATRES: FANTASTICALS : THE CHURCHES., [Correspondence of The Proem.] Nsm Toot, Nov. le, VMS Notwithetanding the departure of General Walker On his last grand filibustering expedition, and the preva lent fatressfon that he wee accompanied by General flenningsen, I yesterday saw the latter hu ryleg along Broadway, at the regulation pace, perpendicular sea ram.rod, and looking fresh as a tulip A few steps be hind him were Governor Banks, of Massachusetts, and Me fine-looking wife, and in rear of them stalked Por rest, with that bold defiant gilt and look, no character iltio of all he does, whether on or off the stage. Not•_ wltbahmdlng all the rumors afloat relative to his retire meet from the stage, nothing authentic to that effect has some from him. apprehend the American pub. lie are not to be deprived of again bearing their beat delineator of tragedy. Your commereial readers will remember that the (Medlar' Parliament lie t winter passed a law Whorls. lag a change In the provincial Coinage, substituting the decimal, or American system, for that of pounds, shit lingo, and pence. flf 0,000 of the new coinage arrived out by the Indian, and will be put In circulation Imme diately. They conalat of ten and twenty-cent pima In • silver, and one Cent Owe in Incase, very beautifully executed. A creel hoax wee perpetrated yesterday on the poor, through an advertisement that appears' on Wednesday In the Bern/ ft and Sun. Some malignant person, for reasons unlmagloable, published a card to which was "And the names of six of our - leading bakers, and several beams, stating that they had made armoire manta todistrlbute, at 17nIon Equate, on Thanksgiving, Day, to the poor six thousand pounds of bread and twelve hundred pounds of beef. By 10 o'clock, on Thursday morning, between four and dee thoueand per sons, meetly women, had assembled, all presenting a apeotaelk of suffering and privation, much as I never be fore had the misfortune to behold. I hear that fits the intention of Mr. Hecker, one of the persona whose{ issues were signed to the card, to Institute sults for libel against the Herald and Sun, and probe the matter' to the bottom. Should a verdict be recovered, (the damages are laid at $1.00,000), It will be expended to purchase bread and meat for the starving Everybody goes to Gaupll's to sea Winterbalteria picture of the Empress of the French, surrounded by her molds of honor. Ac a work of art, It is very well; but nothing extraordinary. The two prettiest face. of the group are Wm Thorne, an American girl, and an Eoglishwoman whose name bits escaped me. The dresses, toilettes, are exquisite, and the general I& rangernent of the details Indicates the highest poselble knowledge of millinery u one of the fine arts. Branch—Alligator Branob—who got himself late trouble, and was a gent up" for &negating thine on. true of moral of our municipal functionarlea, has turned up again as an independent candidate for (lover. nor of the Almsbouto. Stephen is one of those ner. Tons, tentless men, who moat, aotuebow or other, kill., themeelves in the public eye, or they are miserable, Yaeaibiy fifty persons maybe found who will vote fat him as a juice, and that will probably satisfy him for a month or two. J. D. DROWN, J. W. Bowfin, F. W. GRATeolf, Committee A gentleman wbo is familiar with estimating the number of people who daily visit placer.' of aransement in this city, says that the various theatre'', comports, and other exhibitions, yestetday, meet have realised, In the aggregate, not lees than nine thousand dollars, Al Naito's, Laura Keene's, Wall:tells, and, indeed, at all the theatres, and minstrel'', there were afternoon and evening performance'', and at the three I hays de• signated hundreds were turned away unable to obtain admittance. Besides the theatrical, there was another, which may be celled the .groteagne part of the holiday, eoneleting of the appearance in the streets of several different companies of fantaetisals One of theme was designated the Per Coon Robt Itangers, ,, dressed in every ra.' riety of ridiculous colors, all on horseback, and led by a fonr•horse team. Their music 'consisted of a bass drnm and an arrangement of belle, grinding out "St. Patriokie Day in the Morning," ii Annie Laurie," .thliary &e, Their absurd appearance created, infinite merriment. F Next came four large platoons of toys, got up to re., present a fire company on a target excureion—the prices (hanging about the malts of tho urchins) being tin mpg, pane, old boots and things. After them was a company mounted on a tut, with a sign, pitted in large letters, notifying the public that they were the HMI Right Guard." Their male coneleted 'of four hands organs, all grinding at once. Twelve men, on another cart, constituted the guard of the ~O rand Ar rey,” and were so funnily got no that their excited a gusty gallaw from the thousands irho thronged Broad.' way. 4 The aerial's part of the festival was appropriately ob. nerved. Nearly all the plane of. public worship, the Synagogues of the Israelites included, were opened for service, and In nearly all collections were made In be. half of the poor. tater in the day, at the dinner hoar, gobblers and geese, and nuroberlese things edible and potable, walked out of sight, like ItandeVe ghost, da rnel:tat-rating the truth fuloose of the classic a;lom, that the three great rules ever to be observed in (eating as well as in) oratory, are action ! action!! loyant !!!!! A CIASII OF SHALL Pox has raised conside• sable exoitement in Wheeling, Va. The Wok man wrapped a bed quilt round him, and swearing be would not go to the hospital, left the boat be ROB on and made hie way up into town, and is now somewhere ootmealed. Ram. Rovus Tromon, late of Manchester, Mass., has been Anstalled pager of the Presbyterian church in nightgown. N. J. Rnv. J. .P. - REED, of Rile, Pa., has aeoepted a oall to the New Bohool Presbyterian ehttrob l hl Birminallem, near Pittaboroh. *fietrqt aiox, Novg'irbisr--1:9;1863 Letter from New York. A TB'S r NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. fFKgm Wasikingtini—The- Nicsiagnan Emigration Soherte, &c. AW.Saninoron, Nov.l.9.The Collector of anatomi at Mobile "has by this time, received a - Jotter trona" the 13saretary•of the Treatiury against granting a clearance to Alice Painter for areitown. The objection rate mainly on the ground that the expedition now proposed assimilates to theta November, 1861, when the steamer Padden escapedby.meaus of false papers" at the Mobile . custotnhouse, the same aollector having then been do= l'oetved;' .§ttbeegnentevente.were loomailatent with ITm.l reprosenlations , at that time. It le not luten, „dad to interferewith peaceful emigration to Nicaragua, Or to any other country. Dot Nicaragiut Is entitird'to repose ii the confident toner, that the United elates will maintain relitione of pease and amity with her Go vernment and people.' The commercial agent at Heitodtdi, /apt. reports that an abundance of excellent coal can be had there at six dollars per ton of troyhons2nd pounds. Then; In anthoidtj: for saying • that the georotari of the Treasury hue not intimated to any one what rem,. prujations he Will make to congress' with regard to the ra venue. Lieutenant llOndinot, , of the navy, hu redgned. ; IrSiportant Itegardiiig Vuba and Piorto MANOR AHD MIDLAND'S POLICT-A saut-opurezt WAIIIIINOTON, Nov. 19—The Slates learne from a Mend, who is almost direct from the Court of Kid rid.' and whose hoe attainments end high imolai poSitioa suable 'him to approach the highest personages of the Spanish Court, that Prance has taken up the aubtoot of Cohen Independence, and, with Rogland, is proposing to erect Cuba and Porto Rico Into a semi-Independent mo narchy, on paying a unto from that Wand. TEN twilit le to represent the interest on a national debt, to he as mimed by the new monarchy, in conelderetion of her Independence, the debt yenta to be mutual by Praises and Enghnd as a bond for the non•annexation of Cuba to the United etatei. The South - Paso Wagon Road. Si. Lotus, Nov. le.—Uol. Lender, the superintendent of the South Past Wagon Road, arrived at St. Josephs on the 14th -inst. Ile motto that the road wilt be completed to City Rooks, Nebraska, in• eight months } at a colt of $40 2 0110. - . - The Qoyernment appropriated $175,000, and allowed eighteen months for the completion of the road. Col. bander and his party will winter at R.- Joaepha, and start out again in the opting. Thlitheionae Indian.' have burned the greet sten ,the Platte, anteing much suffering among the nettle. Sale of the Lexington and Danville Rail- OPZOINWI. NOT.l9.—A,epeelel despatchaecelyed by the Gault* of this city, rays that the Lexington and Deny'llo railroad has been Bold at public auction for 512. 1 5,000 to Mourn . hfoOampbell, Bowler, & Co. Tho "rollingstook and fixturoe were raid to the same parties for' about $lO,OOO, There were moral b!ddere at the sale. . , The Nicaragua Einigranta. atoms, Nov. 18.—The Walker emigrant* for Nleara gua are to mall 00 Saturday. , rroceedlugs of City Councils. The regular meetings of Councils, usually held on Thursday, convened yesterday afternoon, =E1711117 The following communications were received : One from Franklin nose Company, recently suspended, sok log 'het a definite period may be fixed for.that auspen sion ' One from 'o'll 'Rees, concerning the Seventh precinct-house of the 'Fifth ward. Ono front John Mc- Crea, relative to a lot pursbased from him In 1854, by the old city, prior to the act of oensolidation, so a cite for a Market house. One from the residents of the northeastern section of the city, a king for the hare dootion of a steam fire-engine In that neighborhood One against the ' contract system as authorised by Councils In the construction of certain cal. Tarte, and asking that the work may be done by the day, One against the removal of the market Vends from Second street. One from residents of Green ,treat, against making staid street a Mend for market wagon's. One front Good Will Mom Company, relatlye to a deem fire engine. One &eking the establishment of grades on Maiden late, Viral word. One caking that to case of the removal of the market hovels ; to Market street, a certain lot, bounded by finite's alley and Jeer's court, on Lombard street, above Fifth, be se lected an a O tte for a new market hones. One from the Prison Inspertors, raking for an apprOpriation for en iron railing to be placed in front of tine County prirou. One from B Paulin , ree'coing the post of port warden. The above petitions were referred to the appropriate eommittees. ItiP.Cornmen, from the Committee on Water, pre sented •a• report recommending an extension of the water-worke ; that a thirty-Inch maim be laid along Broad to Prime atreet that a twenty-nloe ineh mein be laid' down Prime street, not to be tapped at any place exerpt In the southeast section, where a 'very limited amply atpre.ent exists . The east of the ex tension will be about $331,000. A resolution accom— panies the report, authorizing the riLance Committee to prepare an ordinance appropriating the neereary •sum. A greed to. Mr. Commas also reported a hi it appropriating sib,* to the Water Department, for the in, obese of Iran pipe and laying It In plane. Agreed to. Mao. a resolution transferring certain Item, arqouet ling to $2,876, in thelappropnatieee to the sane depart ment, which was likewise agreed to. Mr. Williams reported a resolution, authorizing the Oily Controller to nutter certain Items oat of the In come of the Girard estates, amounting to $2,400 Agreed to. Mr. Leidy read In plane a bill providlug for the Ma win which the wbarree and landings shell be leased or rented—by public undue, instead of by prop:title in the usual form. Mr. Leidy explained that wb , at present, are ranted to favorite parties at less than their value. There ere wharves now rented for $2.100 which would each bring 113,000 a year. Mr Leidy's' bill wee order ed.to be printed, sod in ditcusalon wan fixed as the fired rerfu'ar bushing of the next meeting Mr. Methane offered a preamble end resolution rela tive to the construction of a bulkhead and culvert, as provided for by ordinance lo be paid out of the lucerne of the Girard eatatee. The preamble ante forth that the untract wee about to be given to a person who &skit $2,00 more than others who are equally able to per form the work The retention requires the superin tendent of the Girard eatatee to award the contract to the lowest bidder. if the num shall be approved by the ,TH;opartment of Curren. moved to refer the mentions to the Clone 1ni.„1.4e On Girerd Estates. , • iar:llidthenli OPPONlttx*al.ho Orators the oommlttati, and a majority of the bodyhte co '‘orised the uperlntendent to make the award., . e i The mottree to refer was agreed to. &Mr. Cumin moved a saspensloo of the rules, to consider the ordi Bann for the building of a culvert on Twentieth street, north of Arch. The motion was agreed to and ,the ordinance adopted. The culvert is intended. for the epeeist benefit of the Pennsylvania Institute s for the Instruetlott of the Blind. The resignation of Mi. Paulin, port warden, was then accepted. Mr Leidy offered a molt:Moo that the City Controller be requested to sign no warrants drawn by the City pomminioners for indexing certain books, unless he Pball drat be satisfied that the work lute been actually performed. Agreed to do motion of Mr. Coyler, the ordinance authorising the city to confirm the contract with Mr. John MeLlree, for the exchange of a .ot Cony hundred end ninety- Oro by three hundred and twenty-two feet, bounded by Pitswater, Catharine, Twenfy-firet. and Twenty craned eti eets, was taken op. The object is. that a lot had been pu-chased from Mr McCrea to erect upon it a market house. A. committee also hal in view the purchases or another and a larger let further south, on which to build a reeervoir to distribute water. An the reservoir le unnecessary, the advocates of the measure believe the change of the one lot for the Other will benefit the city. The ordinance pinned to a third reading, after a very long• and spirited debate. Mr. Hostees amendatory militants authorising a bridge over the Schuylkill passed duilly, and was sent into Common Coucell. The bill authorleine the Weet Philadelphia Railroad Company to. bay additional rail track, rctoei by the Mayor, WU taken up and referral to &epeeist committee. After come unimportant briallieni %ha °tomb" ad journed. Colima eourroil.. The following communications were received and ap propriately referee' : One front B 0. Penile, as one of the port wardens; a tommunloation from the Inspectors of the prlecin, asking an appropriation of $3 000 for an iron miring in front of the pram; A petition from the Good Will Uoee Company, seklug that their hone. be selected as the location for a stYaou Ere angles; a communication from ;the city controller. stating that be had received the estimate of the Board of Health for 1860—riponser, $34,216; - receipts, $13,671; a protest against a removal of the market wagons from Paco •ti street ; a comp:awl cation from the ifrenklin hose company, complainlogof the arbitrary donne of Chief Engineer Yoaron ; pall thine from cittame asking that the Southwark Mete Company's homes be selected as a location for a etoam Ore engine Mr. Miller and others, remonstrances against the removal of the market wagon stands 10 Second etreet. Mr. Wright. a petition for the removal of Beventit r induct house, Fifth word. Mr. Cooper. a petition milting that Fourth street, from Arch to The streets, be made a stand for maket wagons. Mr Mingle, a re monstrance agslost the removal of the wagons from frond street. Mr. /Reeling, a remonetranee WWI the project of making Fourth street a stand for market wagons Mr. Miller, a remonstrance against the remo val of the culvert on Twenty-fourth street Mr. Hack er, a communication milling attention to a lot on Pine street. between Fifth and Sixth streets, as a so/table place for the erection of a new market liouYe, (referred to the Committee on Merkets.) kir. Gordon, several remonstrances against ;be system of giving out the works on the culverts by contract. Mr. (liiiiogharn, a protest from the otAuserleao Workingmen's League," against the prohibiting of the planing of the Paerenger Railroad oars on &May. Mr. Buordloy, a poi oboe tram the Decatur Fire Oompaoy, of Prankford, asking that their house be selected as is lo cation for a sterna Ore ongluo. Mr. ](rider, one asking for the grading of Malden lane. Mr Barker, of the Committee on Pittance, submitted a resolution transferring certain items of the appro priation to the Inspestora of the County Prison. Agreed to. .5100, an ordinance making an appropriati m of 817,- 185 to the department of the controller for 1.559, which woo postponed and ordered to be printed Mr. Backer submitted an ordinance authorising the chief engineer of the /hinny Deportment to contract for maps of the triable prat e:ty lo each ward, at an expense not exteedieg /14 400. Postponed. Mr. Bat d moved to reconsider Ike vote in regard to the loan bill for the gas works, which was agreed to. The resolution authorising the clerk to advertise for the loan was then avail to Mr. Jones, of the Committee on Police, sabmittrd an ordination appropriating to Bourse Lorain. $5OO. and to the widow of Themes Snyder MOO, Theta arc the offi cers chat were en dreadfully fainted by the premature explosion of a gun at Broad and Prime streets. The ordinance was .greed to, only one member voting against it. Mr Pith, of the Committee on Markets, submitted au ordinance authorising the payment of certain bile for repairs to matketa, amounting to 6267. Loid over. Mr. Wetherill. In place, submitted an ordinance re pealing the ordinance treating the vaccine phynici ins, and compelling the out-door phypicisne of the Guar dian!' of the Poor to perform them, duties. fold over. The rad nano passed by e elect Council, authorities an appropriation tf $16,000 to the WateringDepartmeut, wan agreed to. The amendment made by Select Council to the ordi nance making en appropriation to the Guardians of the Poor, was dammed at much length, Mr littlieek submitted a resolution reeneating the Committee on Girard Estate t a r. port the amount. and what bee been done of the residuary fund of the Girard estate. Agreed to. A resolution was submitted in relation to ;titled malvereation of the general Committee on the Girard Ustate, authorising the appointment of a special com mittee of four from each Chamber to ex ornirie into thin centred, and all other contracts and shrines of the Gi rard estates. The resolution wee adopted Mr. Denele submitted a resolution that the ordinance in regard to the removal or the markeo houses. and to the lisle of the materials, be taken em at 4 o'clock on Thursday next. The resolution was agreed to by a vote of 88 yeasts 24 nays Adjourned. TITANICgGIVINri DAT AT TRH NONTIIERN Homs,—A cheerful spectmle was efforded to the hoe deeds of vieltere at thislavorite innti taboo. on Thurs day at ernoon, by the one hundred and thirty ehildecn— once friendless and destilmte—neetly attired in imitable clothing, and gathered round a bountiful table, which the ladles contbuted for their Thanksgiving dinner. All seemed to e' Joy it heartily, end it wee a touching circumstance to see earth one of the little boys and gbh, on taking their appropriate sesta clasp lb* bands before them and may the " grace" they had been taught. At font o'clock V e company was tailed to order, and. on motion of Mr 11. G. bellooring„ Alto Gregor J. Alltobeson. Beg , was n quested to preelde. On accepting the invitation be made a brief but perti nent adiresa, after which the Rev. Messrs. White and Garden. of the Itpiscopel Mundt, and the Mir Alex ander Nevin, D D , of the Prrabyterlatt Chir eh, were severally introduced, and delivered excellent wadies, The occasion was one of much bitterest, end, It we may safety judge from the appearance of everything about the building, and the children thereeelves, we would aver that there la not a better menated institution in the Gonsmonwealth. marline better meriting a liberal eupport, than "The Northork Home for Priendiees Ohildren." • •,:.ANOTIINIt TWAT IN Lnsuo.—Mr. Jess° Thomas, charged with stealing anoat from the entry of a house at Twelfth and Parrish streets, was arrested ilterdir morning, THE CITY. AlicttfineMlNTS THIS ZVIINING' - • fi 'moino.o - Fcro,EfALL.—The StrakosehAitriTies*i: 'NATIO*At, Mapes —lf Leone Oiveue Ootapani,o NAT oi4L IfAiL.: l, 'ol.4 Yolks , Concert Mae.-D. L'Hovrinte 2 WALtmv•systewi. Tae►Tiay— A~chsrd 111 Youth, Love, and 2°llo • • <„ Wita.tizarr & MazyPs AZON4TIIII , TBlA4t7 -- I Pouvrette ,, — ,, A Cure for the Itesrtsehe,” ASI3IIIII3LT BOlLDlXas.—Bignor Blitz. - OPISA - lioVo.—.Bthioplate illutortah monks. Tan LBOTIIIIII BOARD LAST ETHILII4I.—.WO jui'i'lr'rs' star; - tut evening, and yery;bright ones,,they . ,were, teo—?ark Benjamin end Ifr. Onrtie. , The houses were well tilled, the midterms, talent, and the orat*, So use R pugillatio phrase, in Soo condition."' ldr.Ourtia , s oratory was never so forcible, while Mr.. Benjamin , ' poem was as fragrant as ever with the " sweetamoke'Of rhetorio." On account of the enormous press on oureolunans this morning, we are compelled to actinium the extended acoonnte furnished by our reporters Intiin few dezerlp fivie sentences.. • • The burden of Mr. Denjamtn's song was st /Ashton?' Though 'an old theme, , yet it was a new one ; though bane, yet it wai not deceptive ; though by come wor shipped, by lIQM9 -it , was ridiculed. It was as old an Time Itself, its existinee dating from the first ag-leaf to the latest, fan. Nor wen it cireuntseribed in its ope rations or Its influence The faehionable Tudtandsubd4 kineeelf with paint, the fashionable Hottentot rubbed himself with frkthe fashionable alums lady squeezed her foot, and the fashionable Quakerees folded her drab cape over her 'prim and beautiful form. He glories all the world display', while it is equallyuubmiesive la obeying its every mandate. 'We have fashionable ladies begrimed with lace; arrayed in gorgeous embroidered hose, gemmed fingers, and graceful all over—if she Wee her face. Another point amplified by Mr. Benjamin was,nem modern swell, and his de scription' wee felioltorie and telling. No Kerr brought inch glorious renown uhe who comes mimed in the latest fashion. No matter about his mental qualifica- None —no matter whether he Is gifted or not, a cage or a fool=ne matter what faults be may hive—they are all forgotten if, he Can graeefuliy whirl through the mesas of• the enchanting wilts_ or the ftuoi Wing polka. , Progress mast clear thuwej , +Skim - fashion has the course, wag the cry or many. No matter, what the minted, ?nation toast havathe prise,,BlM y- Is the e nosure of all eyes. Conservatism may sek to rule, or , pesos to bedeck every volley with its beauties, or war to sweep in fury over the blood-stained chid—no mat ter, Fashion must rule supreme'. The' brlghteet bob- Wes rise highest in the air, the bubble character of feallion may -account for its soaring so high in society's estimation. If we stand by the share of the sea, we may see the waves dash the breakers roll, and th e whole °leanest - agitated with fearful fury. It we am a atone into the foamlngwaters it will sink, every mate rial ettbstince will sink to Its natural position. but yet seem of the oemMwill still float on the top. No effort eon dislodge, no nation dissipate it, it will ever main tain Its worthless Pre.eminence And so with the scum of Varbion lathe nea of the World. It gill - still bare its artifleial position, though frail as a tear, or flitting as s. melts In this strain - Mr. Benjamin continued, and we re gret we cannot folicorthe thread of his beautiful and Polished poetry Me description of Fashion , ' 8410- 'lOl3, of its love of change, was in the highest order of philosophical satire. , Change was peculiar to Ame rican fashion, cod to American fashion alone - It cheraaterisad every phase of holden. the weeds or the widow itewell as the rebel of the bride. This month it is one thing, next month the reverse. New newels deck the 'face, spill it yields to plain straw, simple in Its severity. Now skirts are as narrow as A weaver's beam, again they exhibit the amplitude of puncheons. Now we have colors as gorgeous as the setting sun, and again we bare them as sombre as midnight. There were many brilliant episodes which, delivered is theywaid. in the speaker's Inimitable and impliatie style ' elicited much applanae. Theban was about half filled with as attentive and Intelligent audience. Pair Play for Woman' , was Mr. Cattle's theme, and he treated It with an intensity of Manner, and earnestrese of eloquence, that plainly told that his purpose was more to defend a principle than rater "imply for his hearersi amusement. Many of his ideas were radical and extreme. but they pleased the andl• once, and were rapturously applauded. We can only parthistlarlse a point herd and there, for roams Amiss stated. . When e drink with enthusiasm and in the restive throng, Woman, Code last, best gift to, mar,'S was more a matter of ' form then from a feeling of sincerity, as our treatment or woman plainly attests the fact. Denweiacy Is the government administered by all the governed, and not by a class. Class legisle 'Von he deprecated There eves not an Instance in the history of the eternised world where one slave legislated for another that oppression and injustice were not the chareeterieVes of its law-making. And the axiom that holds good when one class of mess rules another Is just as apposite and as true, when the .universal shun of men legislate for the universal alma of women. , . . . , He erotild bare women Invested with political power in its meat liberal features. He scorned the idea that the Tells were unfit for a 'relined woman, and yet fit for a refined gentleman. Maar of u* have queer notions about woman and the right of eud'rege. If we grant it to Per, In the opinion of many, etreightway . she Meg her home and her dreefde, leaving -behind her a cleave of nnhappineee. end a wilderrees, of undarned stock ing* and buttonlesseltirts. The terrors or the poll wheit applied to woman were Imaginary and exaggerated, ant I the contaminating infloence of the muddy pool of pelt. tlcs - wee en abetted dogma. He had never felt It, nor any other man antes they bad (Greed themselves into the mire. No gentleman will lounge In a grog.ehop, or talk polities in a tan-room ; and if these things were Inseparab's from the glorious. rlghti of suffrage, then farewell to the Republic. In Inn he !teed at the end of a row of Boma twenty or thirty mon, and slowly approached the polio In Ma turn, and in aro or in ten minutes did alt that ho winld to make Mr. Frs. mont Prealdent, and yet be felt as free from pollution' In retiring as when betook hie station at the end of the line. Indeed, it was foolish to suppose that a lady In walking up to a small pigeon-bole and dropping a bal lot Into the banes of a gentleman inside, must, semi flee her womanhood It that were the cue; than she should never appear on our thoroughfaree. Judaea, be bad seen husbands and fatherii and brothers take - their wives or female kindred to witness the most pendent spectacles on the etage, to mingle in ''the giddy danie, br to waits in a promizonons throng In the arms of - a Min she may have never seen before, Ms breath redolent of rout and tobacco , and yet were thoae women to propose a Ilea to • Woman's Right Conven tion, these some men would torn up their eyes in ghastly horror. Papa.... he heard a young lady eay to-her father ones, should like to go hear Lucy Stone -to.nticht.'? "lb, my child," he replied, `esleever think or'snob a thing7en ..at std vulgar; come kith me and we will golo the 'opera or tre - h - Itter Foreneu4ra Whatever station God intended a human being to on, :1171.11,7gtotfianiuspiirlom..e.n ;';"N. d . i nr t fr ganfeora'aPwanj man to beano, an Author, it was equally right for her to - become an orator. And be 'believed Lucy Stone sod Lucretia Mott. and Antoinette Brown, bad as good a right to go on a platform and address the' , del. lowekindred elf Mrs. Stowe, or Hannah blord, or Charlotte Pronto, to enlighten and amnia the world with' the productions of 'their brain - -Woe roan had as good a right to eunme these duties an any tribe of hie trowserel eountrymer. whose only credential, were their pantaloons, and to pursue the study of law or medicine as anydong belted youth with the down *wee off his chin and • pair of ,peat tales across his cove - Parenting this vein, Mr Coals mode many hits, fell often* and tellipg. lie conelnded with an earnest and eloquent appeal to - the men before him to aid In the work of emancipating woman from her thraldom. .I# , t on Join this noble band, and If they sneer at us we win laugh, and it they ecold ns we will laugh still, for though the lough in a bad ramie was tam. or Insipid the laugh in a good ape wee as merry and as joyous as the carol of the birds in spring;time. The bottse was filled to overflowing, every seat being crowded as well es the aisles and platform, the lectors occupying somethlog more thie an hour in delivery. . A PAIR OP FXIIININE Switintmas.—A. con- - - - • pie of abroad females, one unknown and the other courting the chemical appellation of Maraud /stager. aid, have 'been vietim'sing many of our olVsens by a 'melee of well•exeeuted swindles. The unknown lady Is about fifty years of age, rattier petit*, and dresses In black. Sae carries a child in her arms, and under pre. tepee of seeking a physician obtains entrain,e into se llout dwellings, and Olen asticlss that may lay within her reach. Vionlfrod does business on a less extended but snore eueoessful scale. She enters a dwelling, repreeenta herself as a lately bereaved' sister, about to pay the final rites to the memory of the departed. The affiic• tint was so sudden, and Winnifred , a means are so limited, she is very reluctantly compelled ,to: throw herself on the generosity of her neighbor for the loan of a mourning dress until the bunal•serrie/ hes been ended In nine oases out of ten the request is gran , ed by the credulous neighbor, a^d In ten cases out of ten the neighbor 11600 no more of the mourning dregs, or the bereaved sister. Among the victims la Mr. John W. Baer, oratorleally known se the Buckeye Blseksmith r> On *Alm eon moo she assumed the came of luting, - Edwards, and pro cured from his family a 'haw!. Mr. Baer discovered the &Wale In a pawnbroker's shop, but hu been unable to renew him asguaintance with the agnieted lady. - 01t1- sane should keep • strict watch on all suspleione en.- tomers, partleniarly these who come to the name of Clarity, as the gem. of swindling, in its multitude of phases. Is alarmingly on the increase. A FiIQITIVX TONNE ON 11111 TEAMS.-- A. Down-easter, (matting the doable-barrelled name of john L. Merrill and (Sluice L. Trench, lied a hearing before ' , Word.r linen yesterday, on the charge of being a fugitive from jostles. It was In evidence that he had served out ten years Imprisonment In Maine, having been convicted of horse stealing. Shortly alter his re lease he again 'created on the same charge, and had been condned in prison, awaiting his trial, when he escaped. by means of en ingenious contrivance pore. Laxly Yankee. Intelligence was Immediately sent to Philadelphia, and einem, were planed M the post office, where there was a letter from big mother. Oa {Vadat... day night he went to obtain the letter, when he WAS arrested by Oft!oar Catlin. He was committed to await the arrival or the authorities of Maine. PURSUIT Oli KNOWLEDGE UNDER DISTIOUL- Tin —A literary Ardent known as Fleury O. Clark. wan arrested yesterday morning on the charge of bur glary. The night being chilly, he had retired Into the bonne of Mr. WeNandi's., Duke street, near Vienna. About one o'clock in the morning Mr. We!fender dis covered his uninvited guest making himselroemfertable in 11,11 acoommodating corner. Not being then or a hos piteble turn the worthy host summarily turned "Henry over to the tender mercies of tho law as a uresnnintive burglar. On searching him a number of ehildren's books were found In his possession, having been stolen The alderman, not appreciating Clark's literary propso• Eltieg, hell him to answer. A rum SICALL Busixass.—Thera Is as small potato busfaese in roguery win anything 'lea, judging from the - Waploite of some of our se and district shim liers d'imlustric A number of silvered plates have been missing lately f rem the doom of several dews•town dwellinue When It is stated that the diver on eecla plate la worth a few pennies ; the labor/lot these gentle. men will be appreolmtel„ ROAMERS COMMlTTED—Yesterday 1110111111 r, joaeph Murray, James Murphy, Wm. ()reply. and Id. Murphy had a bearing before Alderman Ill Hinder, charged with robbing the dwelling of Mr. Wm. lalatin, ley, and bating the awn of $460 It appeared to donee that Murray wax the ringleader, rand aorordingly he wee oommittod in default of $l,OOO hall, while MO three companions were held in $4OO ball to answer. A VILLAIN Clartour.—A. scoundrel named %bums, ratios Reddy, wan arrested at a house on PlllB street by Officer Belly Ile is a fugitive from New Oan. tie, Delaware, where he is charged with a crime of the most heinous char toter, the Walla of which are unlit for publication. The accused was remanded to New Oaatle. Hie reputation is that of an Infatnous villain. SERIOUSLY iNdURED.— SOMO boys amused themselves, on Thursday evening, by tent , ng ono Wen. CI Cook, who was allghtly inebriated. Becoming czar. parotid, be threw a brick at the jnrenVe armed, na. ?lowly wounding a boy named Goma Doane: Teeter day Cook gave himself up, and wee hold In $l,OOO bail to anewei. Hones Tnizr Annnerso.—Liont. Goldoy yesterday morning ordered the arrest of John Flonrey, (who, however, prefare the rather etrange rtteas or John Smith) on the charge 01 O , I7OtITIZ hts nelghborie home and appropriating the same to his own pre The animal wav limed in the heaping et his ekrtcr., OIIILD ebild Intl l l ad George Winch ma serlowdy buried yetterday „ , t 4 .ernoon, at the rseldence or bis robes, fisritorotozO,relow Franklin, Inteenth wa.d. The accent Iron o on. 1 by playing with tome papers rear a, Are An ottleet •••_ us bon& aeveroly burned while trying', extlngttlet t cilium. IItritOVEILUNT.—The avenue 109 .'nz. Imre Chestnut street to Umber:teen Ball ban been enclosed by a largo iron gr.,. The addition ins deeded tin provernent to the equate, ant bears se an Inscription, OARPENTU I B Itab.,, &IBM Micawbor Clicket Olub, an association which nos attune.' quite a local reputa tion, has onlopendo 1 operations for the wrnter. Persons baring bwinesn with the ateociation can see them by calling at headquarters. A PiexPObKRI, ARRIVINID. Washington Herne alin Oenrge Wdtera elm old New jergay eau_ via, was before Alderman Freeman on 'Moley even charged with picking peekete at the corner .of Ufghtti and Oheatnut a redo lie wee enamitted- Reivertsll.-ollleer Bates •arrested several renew On Thursday evening, rear Pith and South streets forming part ors gang of rowdlog. The Meer eM mouitud, but sucooodtut in ollbotuig the whir°. 611414 about 4 yoarg of ago wlea • rmiorer esarlifttlerid Poplar streets yesterday alter, nogg, killing hint thatently:. The bey wee picked up by' "Ai than, AR4 carried to his mother, at her residence, In Yeekson street/ above Tifth,ivrben the person immedi ately cleared', oat, - : and no one "knows who be wee, nor how the accident happesked.i The police, however. are making Millet search, and inquest will be held - to day.. STAvinISWP - 13iSli.--A boy named Benja min Welsh was under arrest yesterday charged with a murderous assault on another youth named Bands:" The wounded boy is in the Pennsylvania Vospital, sive in a precariona condition. It le said that the stabbing .weamerely accidental : -- • - A FATAL•litlynky.-T-A Magnamed nunpamen, 440 Ina tettNy remoyie treeralientYnitiranarrank= ford.passamor callwareaf, OK from hic Wades fili• tinder Morning in the - Venneylvaniellieettal: others are various °Amen" gi to the sendaetorie saleability. A jary was am en" it kiwi Ilospital In the & noon. In the almanac of witaceete, tke- ease was lib" Inroad till to-day, at noon? •,,'!•• •-• 81110411 AoolD3ll.—Two men were admit-, ted Into the Joseph'e Hoteital, Rack with s almoner wooed of the head, mired by - the premature Mechem, of a pistol. Amputation of I Miler Mall found aecea- - eery in one due:' Danairtrr, Ibirrrau.—The difficulty_ lie - tweini tits" didandatrast Intlleisitt the imantOnt'pro. of Wont inn bus arranged, twinge am are -now ran• ring mealy Alms Mot .11xObnago to Iltoltmond. FINANCIAL AND ,COOMERCIAL. The 115onily . Pinatinywitiipir.,ll),llls6 Um, stoat salsa to•day ware confined Olen, to the more reliable Nionritini, fat* ntookiionsridly bang looketripoikoold - V. Hank stocks inaintain Anwar quo tations filth advance' In 'areal ails, and approved railroad bonds are In demand - at, better rasa. North Pitiorrlviiiia- stook and bonds bOth improved, and Pinnsylaani• thdlroad Arai mortgage bonds ad rancid to . . - „ , • The statement of the reselpts She needing Rail road Company, for Ontobor ototwitng a doolSno tattle not earnings for eleven Months of $2911,001, u acin• pared with last year, ea&e decline of neatly. len thou sand king: In the' last week's toaaaga, do not rend - to mist the operators for a rise in Iteadingitillnied stook. There Is a conilderablo tolling Mt also, In -the VP oilipta by tile *gul f 'while the companies bringing coil from the Lehigh • region show an in . _ 'crease... - • Owynne ,end Day's Bank-Note , Regi4tar, for Oeto ben Seth, sates that gc The Bank of Albion, ldwards county* Illinois* will coon •go into operation with paid-up ; capital, of, $60,000, The lasers oftAis bash will be iennired by. State Wets, taken It nine-teethe of their, altaal,isine,. thee ahusdantly savoring thipub- No soh:10 any possible lose on their bills.._ - We are reluctant to suppose *thimble than that the publishers of ale Journatheri, been deeeiced In regard to this lank We bays an answer front a well-informee as' kighlpiesPeetable partyin . who had Dan written to In teleran's thie bank, that there is no barns it Albion, thee& he Mika them; lea good open ing for such an institution There. Ills letterli dated on the litk of November, tee 'Weskiiiter thepubilex tion„of the above netts!, by. - 13 Wynne it Dai, and-to ear minds liproyee souslusively that if there is any truth intim paragraph at all, the othlbion *sib* in the hands of the !harp fratirnity.' t! f {{ _all itreiti and be classed as the canon Jehn W. Gariett has ,beisa elected President of -the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, by two majority oyer Ohanneej Brooks, the latePreddent. ,The vote stood - sixteen for Garrett, - fourteen - for Brooke. - The' Oily Conuolle of Baltimore teeently passed strong reco lotions, instructing the duwetora representing the city to vote for the re•eleetlen of Hr. Broelts.L son iisilte-eleated treasurer. - William It Beetles has been -sleeted noisier of the Carlisle Deposit Dank, nits N. C Mueselman, who less been sleeted Negates , teller of tie Ifilinf - Bankf Gas city. The Great Western' Itillway of Canada L about to plate ,sleeping -earl on the. line between Windier and Niagara Tails. The berths are fitted with spring mot tress 41[01 pillowm; batileorarad with damitli'arid'quilts. Means for washing are also provided, and lawvant will 'be in attentlailiti to watt on that' tra**ltia.aleanlxiiits, &o. The charge for this . accommodation will be half dollar In addition to the - ordinary Wei - which. no ores will grudge who knows Alla misery of ordinary night traveling by railway. Nash 'ear can nate:ma:iodate thirty six persons - The following are the aped° quotations for this date, as furnished by Orsiniati & 00., bullion and *pude bra. kers, No. 40 Borah Third itreef:' • Amer.X Dothan, eldl.oBg Am : Gold , old 1 0 6 " 3( " " / otg Victoria Sovereigns...4.Bs Mexican Dollars:.. :1.04 Old Sovereign, 688 Spanish Pillar D 0115.1.03 . Napoleon 29 frencs...B.B4 Be. American ‘s 1.03 Ten Thatirs 786 Prussian Thalens.....lo ~, 'I. ":- '.. Pitiestari.B.oo Five Prance- - - 07 Ten Ganders — B . 97 German Crowns ' 101 Duette - ' 290 Pronch Crowns 100 span. Doubloeria 18 26 B. and Mex .17 Dols. 26 - Patriot .. , . - 16.00 X.21.16th5, 47 05,1.2.0 - Gnlneae.':..s.oo . The United States Allot lan.ing reduced 'their baying rate for-silver, Its econnerefal Tali* ii thereby at : footed. •..... - . - The following lei the amount of Cost transported on the Phtledelplile and Reading, Railroad ,during .the week ending Thursday, November 1888 limn Port Curb on " Pottarnle " Schuylkill Itaven " Auburn " Port Clinton Total for -week - 198,423 IS Previously this year 1442,484']4 Total ===sME=n The followiog to the amount of Coal tronspOrted on Abe Polnylklli Iri!tgation, for the week ending tibia:lodr 15, 1111141 , - Tone; Owt irom Port 'Cation ' - 11;467 00 " Pattern% - :2,310 17 • " - Schuylkill Haven .....18,609 14 " Port 011aton • 4,080 00 Total for the week Trowtimely this year Total 1,182,158 1-2 To same time tut iest i 114,021114 The Lykons Talley Coal trade, for the week ending November lath, and for the isiaan, h.O Plea safaltowet 1808 ' . Week.' - . Brood. Lykoae Talley Coal Company S 018 ~ , - 48,21 f Short liountaln Mao' 1,089 , 411,319 .Total Same time in 1867 - 4 001 - -110,627 8 400 ._130,031 Increase $OB 1,445 truitee Slates Treuury butanes, Nov. 15.187.111,910 16 Amount of reselpts - 006 702 00 Drafts paid - 718,068 04 Drafts issued - 110.615 3.6 Inerease - ' 166,881'65 rinLADEIMIIIL STOOK SIXDUANNE SALM, 'f • November 19, 1858. - • • lIINPORTZD sr ussurr moss, & co., ssitz-lors, noon, AIMCHANG, IpladxBll, 1110STRR1111 . : 00111115 IBM AND OHISTIOT ITEICETS. FIRST 0000 Penns 61 95,Sji 8000 City R 61...8dy5.1021( 100 do 101% 600 do P R 1800 do —.B dre.lo2X 200 do ' - 102 100 do . .101% 1900 ' do 0va...+61 BOARD. . 10 Penns B (In Iota) 43 4 N Peana B (Iota) 814 10 Varmtkileoh Bk. 49)16 41 kfinelalll B (luta) 63 8 Bk of N At00r....144 - 8 do 144% 80 WO; Bank...;. 27g 4 40 21.4 20 do a6"11t3 100 Oirard Bank.... 12 8 do IS 2 Phlla Bank 110% 3 Nor Bk of-Kan 1 /.121 11 lob Nov pf..aswa 11 • 60 . !do sawn IT 60 do lawn IT ' 100 Norristown 8... 01,4 d. 6Tg Ijnlon Bk of Tn. 92 • 18 do 99 20 iforris Cal.. 1 as 80 -10 Beay..llead..2 da 40 6 do 49 8 dya 102 X 1000 Pa It Id m els 2d. 102 1500 Read It 6. '86.811, fiX 2000 - do 'T0.... SIX 1000 N Penns R 60 600 do 60X 1000 do bi 6034 2000 do d 60X 1000 do 00x 300 EloX Na. 68 It. 50X , 400 do bso , a 02X 1000 do -00 X 200410ktra 6. 10..06 87 8000 do 'd7.:— 87 Peons R 42X AI do 42% BSTWEIIM .." . 54 1 .... 05X -81100Nll BOARDS. 200 Olky 6a: new....106s 26 liallet. , 6 Oosl.tkla 48 BOARD. - 4000 Penns Si 7000 do .. MO Pima 06 00uponi 9 dys 07g 410 do ...5 sort!' 044, 64 do 93X 10 00 Pa It tat rot Os ..1.02 / 0 00 do 1000 do 00x 9d lot Oa.. 90X 2000 do 00 X 10 ...... 90x 2000 00 d doo 90X 2000 do cog 2000 Plilsk Tr.:, Ude. 93 1000 OamitAra Os. Is sog 4000 8101 Nov GB '82.. 69X 800 do '72.. BOX ' 7$ do Boa" LosO 88 APTIB 4N Penni R - 6 Norristown R... 68 60 Morris Cansi.,l4 60 00 Reading B 00 14 L Schur' R 20X 96 Planters Bk, Tn. 106 / Dos. Road 60 54 Morelia:lran Bk. Plttaburgb.bs 64 Commersial Bk.: 46,4 80 d 0.... • • 40) 25 ffirard Bank..., 12 2 Bank-of N dmor.ll4X 2 GeriOnntoiro Gas 6D 6 Poona 4 B 423 ' 4 4 " do '423 14000 Ohini Tat It Wm. 88 8000 Okis Via R IS CILOOING- P.1410204.Y1R51. Bid. Asked BDa , 71 ' 1041(10SX 110 1 / 4 0e. 102 102 g do . 10211 do N0w..106g100 Poona di . . ... ....05 05 X Reading it 25% 28 do BIN 10-82 X 81 do Pdtg 0044.92 OS do do '86.73 781( Penne, 11 42X 48 do lstm E0...102 10254 do 2dm 00% Morris Can C0n..60 00% do Piet' .....108 107 % &Idyl Nov do '32.69% 69% h Nov Imp 6a..70x 71 Bah Nov Btodk... SX do oaf 16% 17 Wtoop't Eltoll.lo log do To Ist mtg. 72 72x do- 24 ' 61 's2x Lone 111 and 11% 12 Girard Book 12 12X Lob ()oil k Nar...61 X 62 do &nip 20x 80 N Ponnalt ey 81( do as 6l)( 60X ' New Creek if X Ontawiesa 63( TRIO PRIEN•YIGIITING MANIA is spreading among the chivalry. The Louisville Courier says that on Monday last a regular priae-fight ee (tarred In Now Castle, Kentucky. between two sthool-boys, aged seventeen and eighteen years. The amateurs In the _"manly art" aro named Gentry and Edwards.All:preliminaries were ar ranged after the order of the Heenan and Morris soy astioeff. Having reached the appointed place, aecompanied by their seconds, they pitched Into orieh other in the moat approved pugilistic style. Three rounds were fought, and both appeared to be equally bruised, when they agreed to decide the contest with knives. But their seconds inter fered, 'nnd the deneument was postponed to some Altera day. Panoomore.-4n Taunton, Mies., a mother and child, supported by tho town, are thus men• Honed In the omelet return of the overseers of the poor to the Secretary of State : Elisabeth Drayton was eleven years old the twenty-fourth day of My, UK and became the mother of Horaee White VDrayton on the Bret day of February, 1/358 roe months and twenty-four dap before ebo woe eleven years An. STONE, a celebrated physician in New Orleans, on being asked how many yellow fever patients he had lest, replied . " about twenty-thre hundred," as that number remains still unac counted for after the other physielans made their reporte THE occontnaston or ?HOST in the South has reduced somewhat the higher estimates of the co ton crop, and throe and a half millions Is now the entail° figura, while the majority of estimates are below that amount. ONE of our exchanges arm ic the wife crop of Gasconado oottuty, liihnouri, this year, is esti mated at 25,600 galls." Tho wino crop is referred to; but 25,600 galls will make a good wile erop, notwithstanding. Wrronenarr has broken out among the Choctaw Indiana, and four men suepected of being wizards have been summarily killed. • ' Paneeiri s Thefrienda of Goo. D. rren• tine, of Loutaville t Ky. t will be pained to heat that be Is finite slok. NEW Yoiti4iiiiiicz* :iiififiliiriii—Ploventber 10. " ?/ 1 QQ RD 3' 16030 billeinirlls3 -so sBrie lB% ,$O% 100 ' sl.. do 10x 1000 Rideau 34 nag 72 60 ,do e.3016,4 - 4 0Paelileatik2A0 -, , 106,5/ 600 ll'arlemaßvirbtel 20x 276 do 103 600 Ohl & R IN A -62 6 Del & Had Oo 91534 • 60 - do b6O 03 50 do A ,. 116 X 100. q .10 slO 614; 20 de, , tir„ 250_ „dr, eln 400 ri 1 61i•YZIV6'06 • ' 79e 200 EetiOnglifi ; ',ls6o 100 Penn Ooal 00 430 Tag = lo , lWpidr6Yenoa 200 Minh Cent $ 100'•"'11 633 i 60 '.' 200 (Jamb prat b6O 231( , 1 1 1Piliannaliti , •e x 120,4 710 New - 207 k Oen' - 11274 1110 fin BR 410 70 .10Ci nw .„1 do MO, 83% 60 fral/k0h111R,1321 72 152 MIX 106 Olev, &, pouts, As 2 100 do d ., 010 8 2 9(1100.12il1 & Mini ER 12 250 do 'b3 62X.110013rootip.pity11); 111 • s —litain and Waldftia Moan hilaitati toiler I re. ;seipts are moderate , with males aggregating ihoggibbbh !at $3 6004 for rejected; 210 40e4 60 for snaeifine Mate i 54.9006 ilk for, extra 23.4000,66 for Superfine - Western; 14.900620' for, extra, and561'41 4 .76 for skinping brands'of extra retied hooy9Alo. - ,Oause lan . 710 or is nominell4l6.2oe6 $5 for _extra: Ponthera Flour' is steadyorith salsa of 800 bbls at 26.20e5.60 for eonunon to.mlxe6...brinde, Snap 710,07.60 pr liney, fair airffareilbt lirandi at "eitri. , . • Cisarsr.-- ; ~Wli The ;market foralit'le and hem scarcely so - - firm, 'with •saieslrloPl boa at ,$1:160 1.179 for. rod. winter Westein, , iiindl7.4o for;n3 01 00 white ()scads Corn is quiet and heavy, with bales of 10.000. bean* 22%076e i , forAffestern- mixed: , " BP is quiet at TOO7IIO. pats ar,ednli at 1,261468 for Virginia. Pennsylvania, and Pussy, end 4114520 ton Western sad ,-- - - — Psortaloss ,—Onr_ Pork .market is sairllrm.-arLik sales of .200 "bbla at 1117,62 for Ideas, mat 814 for Pilule. In Beef Unroll! so *tango aitles, --salsa are small at $6 1048_75 for conatry_Priom ; SIOt for emintry Meer; $lO6ll for ro.ptaksd do"; $1.1.E.0012 for extra do.; Mot Meats and,Baaort are vast , Lard U steady, with 'gales of 160 tbls it 101 j 0110. Butter arid cheese aro with out skills. Offlurstardall,',,wllktrifUng sales at = - 'Markets by-TeleiraP!"-.' &stenMin, ;"40biold; Howard $5 12X. . Wheat Oen. but-ven firm; it ed51.200n 1.26 ; ,Wkite SI 250140. - (loaf dill - end heavy ; new „White 5 . 0.60; Yellow, now 65.08; old 80.55.. Pro. viguins dull and auehinged ; .2deasrarkirm.at-Sl7-25m "it so. -Whiskey firm at ' Moms, Nor. 75 —Sales ordotfon to-dsti. - 9:ooobalee at IV for middling, !Iterates/mien adviceg hating canoed $ decline; •• , es „ - N4Y. 15 . 't active: ae ye and • lelagbet• salsa at Corn firm date ll quiet. Ship. Mee Ls t ? ' earrale-Z450 Maur, 10,000 bee Wheat, TO OsWego-- - No 14.000 , bue.Wheat. kW bb7e lilortr,ll.6oo bag Wheat. and 7.000 bee Horn „Oxsotatrvit; Hoe! 19 —The Hog - market is dull end kneettled; sales nt2,600 Hogs today at $31006 $ 0 : the latterarice , belng 'for Hogs averaging - 23015 e weight. 000 tot •cit'llabtweiglat sold at $5.25 IPlfog." Buyers, at tke Mose, did not offortnter $6 and holders wore will: tug gellers. The receipts to-day amounted t 0.73,000 Hogg. - T. the Provision market holders were willingsellers. Mess Pork declined 60o; bulk Pork do.. (keen Wale also declined." , -.611 closed 'unsettled' and 1101M..3 The *Sather eentlones favorable for slaughtering. Whiskey Is oboted at 1030. -, The other, markets „oontlime he. changed: - Nov. 10.—eatton bybiant; 0f 7;700 -- Nair Qauturs,Nov-10:13.oten-ETheieluigheUreno Shine - In the market ginee the arrival of t , e Canada; the sales to-day were Si 800 bales at .13:411Vo.. Sales of the weak. 55,000 bales; 'vettelpli farther week , 64;000; receipts ahead of lait yeer . 0911000;, receipts &hind of lest year. at- - alt Southern poets,,sol - .4.0; exports of the week, PI 500; total taparte - ler the 7ecitson; 282,000; stook' lalmat,: 55415051 shah; hi, lett: wee' time last Sugartsbuoyantand = J(nsaki it Issue Is le higher; Falecat 290, Xlear quiet at ra 75. - 001W1 1 1,556madriihelnitendeacy,psalegat 750.1 - Mees Perk le (aphid et $15.50.' Lied is'itnti „at - ,loe.: 4 oliffee Ara; estee of the week 51 500 begs,' at 1170 for „cheloe Mo. , Stock is portl4 - 260 bsge -atelnetlo6,ool CM, IV:EMS. , Tivil„8114105 AND ill „PROM:refl.—tit_ tio way hive our shopkeeperriatid - oi r anTifietnieri More clearly wearied their title' to `thOtireid pre-eminence hereto fore aecorded them firjthu.diliplayofjOod isit;:than in the new styles- of , ladieV-botmete for the oreitent action. We, were thertiere forcibly triak - Oethis remark's ii , 44011 wellospeetedleu no very predieble errand'!) the irelindid stoat of Millinery at No. 45 South Seen' ud itreet: In this . ionneotlen wa have avaluable word of. tsidvieci .for.. our lady which they ternoot testity.thelr eou L reefatfon. of in any better way thin bj following it, vls 3 that the proprle. lore, of this: establiehment; lierareAlidOlii; Weed Jr. lrehols, are now dleyortyg,efelrgant hate for ladies ;Ind *Whiten, at Oriedi greitly below their mail Flees, prkrt. to Cheitont strealk above &Tenth.' The fadteeihonV 13 J. S. On/AXE'S &or/15,-81nd° one recetit 'no tice of the celebrated Patrittlike burning Parlor Heat- Ins Slays, patented by Ur Silver,,sad.row iwned by Mr. clerk, Marketatreet, together with bin own valua ble improvement upon St, riesived several titttering testimonials, trOm Mope whobave toted them, corroborative of Whit withei itatrd cenoarolog them. Sher - tits feattire 'Altieliedlii"this stove admirably iislaPttd to ? Up l otilitar3an • andjthat Is Ito mil. saying guslttles.!She. fast .ta i vot t enlymadvi amply ap. 'smut on sclentlf4 'any latiii'llgent obser ver; but lisitbeeii sittsfaitovily„dimonstrated la a large number of . liSitirs'aeli hy;a4iial papiiilusat.. We advise all who are'lls'lVlvit nt sieriee to iiii"thislidmirable ar il* liEr..7..ls..lClutte7s,!hterket-littlet, Adige per- -• Tone. Old 7,147.08 .. 2,081 OD . • 12,874 07 . - 3,672,04 5448.09 TM - P.40410 iti Trtier.—lefairYhtlifk.prphe-. 14 been rearindirdrierini the weeket , following per conel wants : A erarat, a pair efammenntens, lenkrich, dressy article for the :leek in cold weather, ainefr or gloves; or !t mezbetbst thowesWiloabeen experienced In the line of shirts, ratters, hosiery, or under- clothing. All these things together with gents , wrappers In every style tray be bat In greatest comp:4El9m at the eters er Yel .1 . Bair Mode, flea, l'ind elforth nab 'street, ratite goetifecrioXititX.—As the holidays are approsetanii' the eirdl-iiihrino einifoottonery hiblialt mint of Mews' G. Whitman & Go.i'fleconti - street, ,below Oheatnnt, is becoming more and moire ssantme of atter etion. It ts`beaomiog generilljiiiiirrtiiit their lnaelorm etnaler; which' they preseet . In , a thousand tempest forms , are. not exeelled in the 'United etntee for sillier richnesa or purity,: Oar friends In want of eonfectitmery should bear this in mind: - • 1 4714.18 10 ,65,5210111 4.1,145,621 00 ", TUB LINB:07-11IrtrAt one buy in orrginal pilau 'ever hareitinight er nallirig a weekly paper g , Theldoe-of-Battle 131dp." sod hence we'pstdewn ele*sonde Soalon, ai uotnfilyS, Octets, but emphatically a newspaper genius. The new paper which he hai'lentiehed fini:lhildng Mitt; and one that will appeal t o the patriotism of every true Ameri can. It has just*the contents tebe'po . pular, end we ap prehend that It will !meow, the most widely.elrculated paper In the country. The piper is good, the ente well - execntidoind everything about trahows the points of one of the moat popular crafts that was aver launched on the sea of literature. As the commander la an ex perienced hand at the budgets, and has all the °porgy, skill, and capital to make It go, there 75130 doubt of The seeress rut-Ale st Line.of-Battle Ship."—efere York Scenic: Day Reek, The Battle Ship ten be bad of Wr3tlll, KO Mist. nat atreat,Thiladelphla, Far year, or J cents per 4teikr. ELEGANT CORTAINA AND CURTAIN MATERIALS. Those of our patrons in want of Theca besnitihttprylor deolratlons, will do well to es'arahle the large_ ask:p ried stook of oar friends W. Oarryl Brotlferi, in the lissente Halt, 710 Ohestant street,, .Theyherainst receirel a large Invoice of Preach trocatelles of all the desirable colors, for furniture and for:curtains. They also have every variety of Gimps, Fringes, Taeselm, Gilt Cornices, nail Carved Wood Cornier', nude to or der, any pattern. Their stock of Lane and'hltrelin. Cur taine Is larger than any, howls in this city, and as cheap. They have several patterns of_ rlsh .ace Curtains, for double 'and bay isindoeni, whir:nide two - yards wide, aid four andsOralf yards long, each: .•_ 7 11 7 11911017 &ADIS, of better quality,_ and cheaper than any store In'Plillidelphia. oda . all the fixtures complete, far only seventy•five cents each. Good Bhedes and all the fixtures ermplete for only TO unto eaelW Gold Bordered glades, Linalmapts, The Curtain Damasks, double width, at T 6 cents a yard, are good and handsoine, Oral eaters: _ . You lan here order your fledging, and have them made, trimmed, and put up In the beat Manner for Parlors, Dining Booms, er Chambers. The Messrs. Carryl keep every description of Wide Satins, Irons toilet, Bilk, Taw, Patin Damask Lemnos, Table and Plano Covers, Picture Tassels, Plashes, de., - of the finest quality. They recently purchased of Rears. L. J. Levy 1: Co, their entire stook of Curtain trimittlnga and fecal Mr. W. Ef Cunt's former - business connec tions with Mims. A. T. Steviart fr. Co , the -warld renowned dry-goods hone of New Tihrk; from _our Termel knowledge of then. gentlemen we can confi dently recommend out lady readers to call and examine their - elegant thick. Curt ains urtains at Tl 9 Chestnut etrett, in the Marton!, 1101. GZRLS want good inkilninde; young , men want printout and sweet tempered wives Every tingly Want. - one _of Savage's 'lngle or double-threat Hewing Ma chines. L. 8. Raym end ia the agent, No. 722 Chestnut street, second door. Dn. BARNES'S great remedy for the piles eon. Omni to perrorm cures thti are almost rabaloss. When priiperly applied, it has never been known to fail. .The Doctor's sertificatem contain the names of many et our *Onions. Ono of the colas mired by it was of tlitrty seven years cantinas S 3 05.8kt:it etreet. Tilt CHESS TOIITtNAIigIST—TI(II BUTZ OP TWO Gams.—The telegispelealteleigame, between New York and PhiladelpVa, excites interne hate - eat among the lovers of the game. The New Yorkers have lost a Bishop, *Knight, and a Pawn, while the Philadelphians have lost both their Knights sad a Pawn. The manage men, of the Pawns during the progress of the game has been eneedingly skilful. Beery niece is carefully con sidered by the players in each city, and the - Philade'. pistons' ploy wee varlet at a parple_Xin point, on Wed nesday night, by a proposition that all hands should move off to the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of-Beek hill dr Wile - n, Nos. 605 ied 605 Chestnut street, above Sixth, and get themselves new and elegant suite of winter clothing. J. W. ItaAmur, 48 North Fourth street, will publish Bev. Mr. Wadeworth's Thookoglving Fannon on Tuesday next. Bee advert'aement in another co!umn. "MONEY ie tho root of all but the editor of a eetemporery writes thus per-rostra:— Mosey shall yet 'weave the web of brotherhood, in which the warp' shell be Love, and the filling' Wis dom, and this web shell furnish n petters' tot elm sailers garment to every ohltd of Got'. And we add, for every eltild of Man, at the fashiona ble store of GRAMTILLS Sroxra, No lifti Chestnut street, where may be found the best atook of faehiona "ble resdpmade clothing lathe city. - SPBASING MODEItAinLY, and without any in tention to exaggerate well-known facts, it may be with mach trails averred that the beat and mot wort"y fel low Is somewhat irldebted to hit appearanoe for his personal popularily. Without a good suit of @label! he sonnet erbeet to be reeelred lota the best society, and elites he Moves in society ha cannot be as much liked as his good quantaes may regtilio. How important, then, the truth that the man who can 'supply each cod allot the deficiencies, I.E. H. Eldridge the proprietor of the Old lerantlin Hail Clothing Emporium," No. 891 Chestnut street. FINE AND 001110 N TEA TRATE,— Nee and Common Table Cut!eq. Pine silver Plated Ware—Trade Plated Fine and Cowmen Willow We Maude E. W. earryrißurnlahing Store, 714 Obeatnut PLATND TEL AND FRUIT KNIVES.-- Plated Fish, Ice Oreain, and Oake BnhYal. " Plated Nut Orautera . and Ivor) and Pearl liand'ed Table ttuttery, at X. W. Cmryl's Yantistang atm, fliglititati stR